Account object (Outlook)
The Account object represents an account that is defined for the current profile.
Remarks
The purpose of the Accounts collection object and the Account object is to provide the capacity to enumerate Account objects in a given profile, to identify the type of Account, and to use a specific Account object to send mail.
Note
Helmut Obertanner provided the following code samples. Helmut is a Microsoft Most Valuable Professional with expertise in Microsoft Office development tools in Microsoft Visual Studio and Microsoft Office Outlook.
Example
The following two managed code samples are written in C# and Visual Basic. To run a .NET Framework managed code sample that needs to call into a Component Object Model (COM), you must use an interop assembly that defines and maps managed interfaces to the COM objects in the object model type library. For Outlook, you can use Visual Studio and the Outlook Primary Interop Assembly (PIA). Before you run managed code samples for Outlook 2013, ensure that you have installed the Outlook 2013 PIA and have added a reference to the Microsoft Outlook 15.0 Object Library component in Visual Studio. You should use the following code samples in the ThisAddIn
class of an Outlook add-in (using Office Developer Tools for Visual Studio). The Application object in the code must be a trusted Outlook Application object provided by ThisAddIn.Globals
. For more information about using the Outlook PIA to develop managed Outlook solutions, see the Welcome to the Outlook Primary Interop Assembly Reference on MSDN.
The code samples show the DisplayAccountInformation
method of the Sample
class, implemented as part of an Outlook add-in project. Each project adds a reference to the Outlook PIA, which is based on the Microsoft.Office.Interop.Outlook namespace. The DisplayAccountInformation
method takes as an input argument a trusted Outlook Application object, and uses the Account object to display the details of each account that is available for the current Outlook profile.
using System;
using System.Text;
using Outlook = Microsoft.Office.Interop.Outlook;
namespace OutlookAddIn1
{
class Sample
{
public static void DisplayAccountInformation(Outlook.Application application)
{
// The Namespace Object (Session) has a collection of accounts.
Outlook.Accounts accounts = application.Session.Accounts;
// Concatenate a message with information about all accounts.
StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
// Loop over all accounts and print detail account information.
// All properties of the Account object are read-only.
foreach (Outlook.Account account in accounts)
{
// The DisplayName property represents the friendly name of the account.
builder.AppendFormat("DisplayName: {0}\n", account.DisplayName);
// The UserName property provides an account-based context to determine identity.
builder.AppendFormat("UserName: {0}\n", account.UserName);
// The SmtpAddress property provides the SMTP address for the account.
builder.AppendFormat("SmtpAddress: {0}\n", account.SmtpAddress);
// The AccountType property indicates the type of the account.
builder.Append("AccountType: ");
switch (account.AccountType)
{
case Outlook.OlAccountType.olExchange:
builder.AppendLine("Exchange");
break;
case Outlook.OlAccountType.olHttp:
builder.AppendLine("Http");
break;
case Outlook.OlAccountType.olImap:
builder.AppendLine("Imap");
break;
case Outlook.OlAccountType.olOtherAccount:
builder.AppendLine("Other");
break;
case Outlook.OlAccountType.olPop3:
builder.AppendLine("Pop3");
break;
}
builder.AppendLine();
}
// Display the account information.
System.Windows.Forms.MessageBox.Show(builder.ToString());
}
}
}
Imports Outlook = Microsoft.Office.Interop.Outlook
Namespace OutlookAddIn2
Class Sample
Shared Sub DisplayAccountInformation(ByVal application As Outlook.Application)
' The Namespace Object (Session) has a collection of accounts.
Dim accounts As Outlook.Accounts = application.Session.Accounts
' Concatenate a message with information about all accounts.
Dim builder As StringBuilder = New StringBuilder()
' Loop over all accounts and print detail account information.
' All properties of the Account object are read-only.
Dim account As Outlook.Account
For Each account In accounts
' The DisplayName property represents the friendly name of the account.
builder.AppendFormat("DisplayName: {0}" & vbNewLine, account.DisplayName)
' The UserName property provides an account-based context to determine identity.
builder.AppendFormat("UserName: {0}" & vbNewLine, account.UserName)
' The SmtpAddress property provides the SMTP address for the account.
builder.AppendFormat("SmtpAddress: {0}" & vbNewLine, account.SmtpAddress)
' The AccountType property indicates the type of the account.
builder.Append("AccountType: ")
Select Case (account.AccountType)
Case Outlook.OlAccountType.olExchange
builder.AppendLine("Exchange")
Case Outlook.OlAccountType.olHttp
builder.AppendLine("Http")
Case Outlook.OlAccountType.olImap
builder.AppendLine("Imap")
Case Outlook.OlAccountType.olOtherAccount
builder.AppendLine("Other")
Case Outlook.OlAccountType.olPop3
builder.AppendLine("Pop3")
End Select
builder.AppendLine()
Next
' Display the account information.
Windows.Forms.MessageBox.Show(builder.ToString())
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
Methods
Name |
---|
GetAddressEntryFromID |
GetRecipientFromID |
Properties
See also
Account Object Members Send an email given the SMTP address of an account Outlook Object Model Reference
Support and feedback
Have questions or feedback about Office VBA or this documentation? Please see Office VBA support and feedback for guidance about the ways you can receive support and provide feedback.